If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
#61
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
Ken Blake wrote:
The biggest problem with backup is that I have been burned by backing up to HDD, which are sort of like having a battery backup to a battery, where both suffer the same failings under the same conditions. Were you burned by having backed up to an *internal* HD? As far as I'm concerned, that's better than no backup at all, but just barely. I have never backed up to an /internal/ HDD, where I've been burned aplenty by backing up to strange media (e.g., ZIP drives of the past) and to removable media (e.g., USB sticks and USB drives) which tend to corrupt themselves on Windows if you simply look at them askance. Both the original and the backup are vulnerable to simultaneous loss by user error, nearby lightning strike, virus attack, even theft of the computer. Theft and lightning aren't a problem here in the hills above the Silicon Valley, but a virus could easily be a problem with an internal HDD. So I like to backup to DVD, which has the main problem of data being larger than 4.7 GB in toto. DVDs are external media, so they are better than an internal hard drive, but they are very vulnerable to failure. As far as I'm concerned, much better is one or more external hard drives; alternating between two is great. What I like about DVD is that it doesn't require power to work, where the power connectors of some of my HDDs (the older ones) is a PITA to reproduce. Sure, I could disassemble the case and see what's inside and then use the SATA/PATA/IDE to USB, but that still doesn't negate the fact that Windows eats up the file system when/if you unplug it in a way that Windows doesn't like (ask me how I know this). If SSD gets to the price of DVD, that would be the next option, I would think. One problem with bulk DVDs is that Costco doesn't sell the stack of 100 anymore... Sigh. |
Ads |
#62
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
PeterN wrote:
They are all industrious standard USB3. I've had really back luck with corruption if I pull the cord out while Windows thinks it should be connected, where the /entire/ HDD is corrupted. The data was still there - but it had to be recovered - the last time using Recuva - but it has happened multiple times. So I _hate_ those removable media HDDs. But, as you said, we each have our own needs... |
#63
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
In article , ultred ragnusen
wrote: I've had really back luck with corruption if I pull the cord out while Windows thinks it should be connected, where the /entire/ HDD is corrupted. user error. The data was still there - but it had to be recovered - the last time using Recuva - but it has happened multiple times. user error. |
#64
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
In article , ultred ragnusen
wrote: What I like about DVD is that it doesn't require power to work, yes it does. where the power connectors of some of my HDDs (the older ones) is a PITA to reproduce. sata, pata and scsi are all standard. Sure, I could disassemble the case and see what's inside and then use the SATA/PATA/IDE to USB, but that still doesn't negate the fact that Windows eats up the file system when/if you unplug it in a way that Windows doesn't like (ask me how I know this). user error. |
#65
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 13:20:22 -0800, ultred ragnusen
wrote: Ken Blake wrote: The biggest problem with backup is that I have been burned by backing up to HDD, which are sort of like having a battery backup to a battery, where both suffer the same failings under the same conditions. Were you burned by having backed up to an *internal* HD? As far as I'm concerned, that's better than no backup at all, but just barely. I have never backed up to an /internal/ HDD, where I've been burned aplenty by backing up to strange media (e.g., ZIP drives of the past) and to removable media (e.g., USB sticks and USB drives) which tend to corrupt themselves on Windows if you simply look at them askance. If you say so. But I've done this on multiple computers in many versions of Windows for many years, and I've never had a single problem with my backups. If you have, I think it's very likely that the reason is that you're doing something very much wrong. |
#66
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
On Mon, 26 Feb 2018 20:22:49 -0800, ultred ragnusen
wrote: Putting the new HDD in the SATA1 slot of the motherboard, I can boot off of the new drive which has the latest Windows 10 Pro ISO installed. http://wetakepic.com/images/2018/02/...t_device_2.jpg Now that it's confirmed by the Microsoft Retail Store that the operating system the Windows 10 update bricked is a goner, there's really nothing left to do but back up the data and then format the disk as a new disk. http://wetakepic.com/images/2018/02/...ystem8f091.jpg I don't need two terabytes, where I never even needed one terabyte, so, I guess I'm going to learn how to RAID these things. In my experience, RAID is quite fragile. I've learned through experience to avoid it on my personal machines. -- Char Jackson |
#67
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
On Mon, 26 Feb 2018 22:30:05 -0800, ultred ragnusen
wrote: nospam wrote: PS: The Microsoft Store feeds you though, while the Apple store does not. i've never seen food offered in any microsoft store. They offered me a the coke you see in this picture... http://wetakepic.com/images/2018/02/...il_store_2.jpg Isn't calling Coke "food" setting a pretty low bar? Hopefully, there was a little bit more to this feeding thing than just a soft drink. -- Char Jackson |
#68
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
In article , Char Jackson
wrote: I don't need two terabytes, where I never even needed one terabyte, so, I guess I'm going to learn how to RAID these things. In my experience, RAID is quite fragile. I've learned through experience to avoid it on my personal machines. raid is definitely *not* fragile. it's extremely robust, although not the best choice in every situation. |
#69
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
Char Jackson wrote:
They offered me a the coke you see in this picture... http://wetakepic.com/images/2018/02/...il_store_2.jpg Isn't calling Coke "food" setting a pretty low bar? Hopefully, there was a little bit more to this feeding thing than just a soft drink. You have a valid point. In both visits, someone walked up to me asking if I wanted something, and then they rattled off a list of those somethings. I took a coke each time, but I don't remember what all those somethings were. Most were drinks, but I thought I heard cookies in the list, but I'd have to go back to be sure. The point was that they never offered anything at Apple visits. |
#70
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windows without installing anything on either
nospam wrote:
I don't need two terabytes, where I never even needed one terabyte, so, I guess I'm going to learn how to RAID these things. In my experience, RAID is quite fragile. I've learned through experience to avoid it on my personal machines. raid is definitely *not* fragile. it's extremely robust, although not the best choice in every situation. Based on listening to the conversation about RAID from those of you who have experience that I lack, I think I'll keep those snakes out of my aquarium. Thanks! Since I now have far more disk space than I currently need, most likely, I'll just dual boot with Ubuntu & Windows 10 using grub following one of the many tutorials. https://www.groovypost.com/howto/dua...dows-10-linux/ 1. Install Windows 10 Pro 2. Install Ubuntu alongside Windows 3. Set Grub to choose either one by default |
#71
|
|||
|
|||
A simple way to transfer photos from your phone to Windowswithout installing anything on either
In article
Char Jackson wrote: On Mon, 26 Feb 2018 20:22:49 -0800, ultred ragnusen wrote: Putting the new HDD in the SATA1 slot of the motherboard, I can boot off of the new drive which has the latest Windows 10 Pro ISO installed. http://wetakepic.com/images/2018/02/...t_device_2.jpg Now that it's confirmed by the Microsoft Retail Store that the operating system the Windows 10 update bricked is a goner, there's really nothing left to do but back up the data and then format the disk as a new disk. http://wetakepic.com/images/2018/02/...ystem8f091.jpg I don't need two terabytes, where I never even needed one terabyte, so, I guess I'm going to learn how to RAID these things. In my experience, RAID is quite fragile. I've learned through experience to avoid it on my personal machines. -- Char Jackson Dig that, people, Raid criticising RAID. Wow! |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|